NGO funding is a central component of EU foreign policy, portrayed as helping to stabilize societies and ensure peace in the EU’s neighboring regions.

In contrast, some of the NGOs funded by the EU use human rights as a façade to promote political agendas contrary to the EU’s stated policy for the resolution of the Arab-Israeli conflict. This includes campaigns calling for anti-Israel BDS (boycotts, divestment, and sanctions), using inflammatory rhetoric to delegitimize the state of Israel, and opposing a two-state solution.

Oversight for NGO projects is severely lacking. For instance, an independent evaluation of a major EU-funded project on “Abolition of the Death Penalty” found that “information gathered from files and interviews with EC staff show weak monitoring by EC staff and poor knowledge of what projects are actually about, particularly at the Brussels level.”

There is also a complete absence of transparency and accountability. Project evaluations are not released, making it impossible to independently verify that projects achieve their stated goals and reflect the foreign policy objectives of the EU. (In response to requests from NGO Monitor, the EC provided a disk of documents with most details deleted.)

Additionally, NGOs and NGO projects are selected for EU funding by unknown officials in local EC offices. They may have close connections to the NGOs that receive funding, a clear conflict of interest, or are guided by ideological considerations. Despite requests from Members of European Parliament (MEPs) and NGO Monitor, the names and backgrounds of the decision makers have not been released.